Barcelona legend backs defender to challenge Lamine Yamal to Ballon d'Or and reminds teenage sensation he has 'a long way to go'

Barcelona icon Hristo Stoichkov hails Lamine Yamal as the favourite to win the Ballon d’Or but says he faces competition from Paris Saint-Germain.

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Stoichkov says Yamal is world’s bestPSG’s Marquinhos and Vitinha also praisedAward to be handed out in SeptemberFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Barcelona icon Stoichkov has publicly thrown his weight behind Yamal as the frontrunner for the 2025 Ballon d’Or, declaring he would personally present the award if the youngster wins it. Speaking on , the 1994 Ballon d’Or winner praised Yamal’s brilliance while also offering a reminder that the teenager still has "a long way to go." Stoichkov also named several other standout players, including PSG’s Marquinhos and Vitinha, as serious contenders for the prize.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesTHE BIGGER PICTURE

The 17-year-old dazzled in a title-winning season with Barca lifting La Liga, Copa del Rey and the Supercopa de Espana to earn his place among the top contenders for the prize. However, the Bulgarian legend believes the final podium will likely feature names from either Barca or PSG, with Vitinha and Marquinhos leading the latter challenge. If Yamal gets it, he would be the youngest Ballon d’Or winner in history, beating Brazil and Real Madrid legend Ronaldo, who won it at 21 in 1997.

WHAT STOICHKOV SAID

The Barca legend pledged to present the trophy himself if the teenager wins: “If he wins it, I'll give it to him personally.”

While full of praise, Stoichkov reminded fans that Yamal is still just getting started: “Lamine Yamal is a very young boy who has a long way to go.” Despite his youth, he was unequivocal about Yamal’s talent: “I really enjoy watching him because he has so many interesting qualities.”

Yet the former Ballon d’Or winner also acknowledged there’s strong competition for the honour, singling out PSG stars for their standout seasons: “If you tell me today that PSG's Marquinhos is the one to take him, I'd believe you too. Then we have Vitinha, who has also played fantastically this year. He had a spectacular championship in France and a spectacular Champions League. There are many players ready to win it.”

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AFPWHAT NEXT FOR LAMINE YAMAL?

Yamal will focus on coming back from the summer break to continue his meteoric rise ahead of the Ballon d’Or gala in September. Whether or not he lifts the award, his name is firmly in the mix alongside senior stars, with the likes of team-mate Raphinha and PSG's Ousmane Dembele.

Paudel to lead Nepal in Asian Games, Lamichhane picked in squad

Rohit Paudel will lead the Nepal men’s team in the Asian Games in Hangzhou, China. Legspinner Sandeep Lamichhane, who is currently out on bail in a case concerning alleged sexual coercion, has been picked in the squad.The squad sees wholesale changes from Nepal’s last T20I outing — a tour of Kenya in August 2022. Veteran batter Gyanendra Malla has since retired, while Arjun Saud, Pawan Sarraf, Mohammad Aadil Alam, Basir Ahamad and Aarif Sheikh among the others from that squad who don’t feature in the 15 picked for the Asian Games.Wicketkeeper Aasif Sheikh, Kushal Bhurtel and Dipendra Singh Airee make up the top order, Kushal Malla and Binod Bhandari will shore up the batting department, with Bhandari also serving as a backup wicketkeeper.Karan KC will lead the pace attack, which also features Sompal Kami, Gulshan Jha, Abinash Bohara and Bibek Yadav. Pratis GC, who is uncapped in T20Is, has also been called up to the squad.Lalit Rajbanshi will form the spin attack along with Lamichhane, with the likes of Airee and Malla expected to chip in as well.The Asian Games will get underway on September 23.Nepal men’s squad for Asian Games: Rohit Paudel (capt), Aasif Sheikh (wk), Kushal Bhurtel, Dipendra Singh Airee, Kushal Malla, Binod Bhandari, Sandeep Lamichhane, Karan KC, Sompal Kami, Gulshan Jha, Abinash Bohara, Bibek Yadav, Pratis GC, Lalit Rajbanshi, Sundeep Jora

Devine cuts loose to power Scorchers before Hurricanes are blown away

Debutant pace bowler Chloe Ainsworth made her mark with a double-wicket opening over

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Oct-2023

Sophie Devine slammed 87 not out off 44•Getty Images

Sophie Devine had an instant impact in her new middle-order role for Perth Scorchers as they secured a crushing opening win over Hobart Hurricanes who were bundled out for 88.Devine, batting at No. 4, hit 87 off 44 balls and dominated stands of 69 with Amy Jones then 65 to Amy Edgar after Scorchers had been 52 for 3 in the eight over.Related

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Having previously opened for Scorchers, Devine will likely have the middle-order role – something she has done this year for New Zealand – at least until Nat Sciver-Brunt arrives with Lauren Winfield-Hill opening the innings.Shabnim Ismail was the standout bowler although she went wicketless, with 14 dot balls in her four overs and 14 of the runs she conceded coming off her last over.In reply, Hurricanes were blown away. Their batting line-up was without the ill Elyse Villani and injured Nicola Carey meaning a change of plans and order.After Milly Illingworth had impressed with her pace at North Sydney Oval on the opening night it was the chance of another debutant quick, Chloe Ainsworth, to make a mark with a spectacular opening over.She produced a searing inswinging yorker to remove Lizelle Lee then followed that by trapping stand-in captain Heather Graham lbw. By the fifth over, Hurricanes were 19 for 4 and the game was as good as over.Stella Campbell, who has moved to Scorchers from Sydney Sixers, claimed two wickets in an over while Alana King helped herself to three which all involved Mooney behind the stumps.

Kansas City Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes, USWNT legend Carli Lloyd: Social media reacts to USMNT's Gold Cup loss to Mexico

El Tri won a dramatic Gold Cup final over the USMNT, erasing a 1-0 deficit to claim their 10th tournament trophy

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  • USMNT lose to Mexico 2-1
  • El Tri lift 10th Gold Cup
  • Social media reacts to result
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    With the World Cup starting in less than a year, the 2025 Gold Cup final had heightened attention, as it was the last competitive match for both the USMNT and Mexico ahead of next summer's tournament. And the stars were certainly watching as El Tri would rally for a 2-1 victory over their heated rivals.

    Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, USWNT legend Carli Lloyd and ESPN's Pat McAfee were among those to comment on the final, along with fans from both nations.

    GOAL highlights the best social media reactions.

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  • WHAT THE FANS ARE SAYING

  • WHAT THE CELEBRITIES ARE SAYING

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  • WHAT THE PUNDITS AND PLAYERS ARE SAYING

Palmeiras 'some' do Twitter para reforçar campanha social; saiba mais

MatériaMais Notícias

Na noite da última terça-feira, o perfil do Palmeiras no Twitter saiu do ar e deixou os torcedores aflitos, cogitando até mesmo um ataque hacker. No entanto, não se trato disso. Com o objetivo de dar visibilidade ao problema do desaparecimento de pessoas no Brasil, o clube promoveu, em parceria com a ONG Mães da Sé, uma ação especial em sua conta na rede social.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasPalmeirasPerfil do Palmeiras some do Twitter; clube promete explicação nesta quarta-feiraPalmeiras11/10/2022PalmeirasPalmeiras campeão quando? Saiba cenários que podem levar ao título do BrasileirãoPalmeiras11/10/2022PalmeirasEndrick, Navarro ou gringos? Sem Rony, disputa no ataque do Palmeiras fica abertaPalmeiras11/10/2022

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> Relembre a invencibilidade do Palmeiras fora de casa no Brasileirão

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> Veja classificação e simulador do Brasileirão-2022 clicando aqui

O Verdão desativou o perfil das 20h de terça-feira (11) às 9h desta quarta (12) para chamar a atenção da sociedade sobre a angústia de quem não sabe o paradeiro de um familiar.

– Se você, torcedor palmeirense, sentiu falta da nossa conta no Twitter, imagine a agonia e a dor de uma mãe que não encontra o seu filho. Eu convido toda a Família Palmeiras a conhecer o trabalho desenvolvido pela ONG Mães da Sé, que leva carinho e esperança para milhares de famílias que têm pessoas desaparecidas – disse a presidente Leila Pereira.

Segundo dados do Sistema Nacional de Localização e Identificação de Desaparecidos (Sinalid) do Conselho Nacional do Ministério Público, há mais de 88 mil pessoas desaparecidas no Brasil – cerca de 30 mil delas são meninos e meninas que estão passando o Dia das Crianças longe de suas famílias.

Fundada em 1996, a ONG Mães da Sé atua com os setores público e privado na busca por pessoas desaparecidas, com ênfase em crianças e adolescentes, além de oferecer conforto aos pais vítimas desta grave violação de direitos.

– Quando você enterra um filho, você vive um luto real; mas, quando esse filho desaparece, você vive a dor da incerteza. Agradeço ao Palmeiras por mais uma vez se unir a esta causa tão importante, contribuindo com a nossa busca por pessoas desaparecidas -afirmou a presidente da instituição, Ivanise Esperidião da Silva, que desde 1995 procura pela filha Fabiana.

A ação faz parte do programa de responsabilidade institucional Por Um Futuro Mais Verde, que visa consolidar o clube como uma organização responsável e geradora de impacto positivo para a sociedade, por meio da atuação integrada entre pilares econômico, social e ambiental.

Para ajudar a ONG Mães da Sé e saber mais sobre o projeto, acesse o site www.maesdase.org.br ou entre em contato pelos telefones (11) 3337-3331 e (11) 99826-3991.

Karvelas cleared by ECB after investigation into Leicestershire incident

Ari Karvelas, the Sussex seamer, has been cleared of breaching ECB regulations on player behaviour following an investigation into an incident during the LV= Insurance County Championship game against Leicestershire at Hove last season.Karvelas was made unavailable by his club for the final two matches of the season, reportedly over a comment made to Leicestershire’s Pakistan international batter Umar Amin during a fractious encounter, which also resulted in an ECB ban for Cheteshwar Pujara, Sussex’s captain, and Tom Haines and Jack Carson being stood down for a game apiece.Sussex won the game but were subsequently docked 12 points by the ECB, effectively ruling them out of the running for promotion from Division Two.More than a month after the conclusion of the season, Sussex released a statement declaring the matter closed: “Sussex Cricket can confirm that the ECB Integrity Team has concluded its investigation into Ari Karvelas following the LV= Insurance County Championship match against Leicestershire on September 13.”The ECB Integrity Team has confirmed that there has not been a breach of the ECB regulations and therefore, no further action will be taken. The club now considers this matter closed and will not comment further.”Without the services of Karvelas, their leading wicket-taker in the Championship, Sussex collected a draw and a win from their final two games, which lifted them to a third-placed finish behind Durham and Worcestershire.

'Football is a religion' – Callum Williams on the impact of Brazilian teams at Club World Cup, the 'Carnival-like atmosphere' across the U.S. and why PSG is 'best team in the world'

Mic'd Up: The world soccer analyst discussed the influence of Brazilian soccer at the CWC, 'legend' Thiago Silva and semifinal favorites

Callum Williams, soccer commentator for Apple TV, added a new role this summer as one of the voices covering the FIFA Club World Cup for DAZN.

Williams has experience covering the world's game, from the EFL Championship to the Copa Libertadores. In recent years, he's found passion in the Brasilerao Serie A, and at the 2025 Club World Cup, he's witnessed the flare that ignited the entire country.

"Honestly, I think people, if they didn't know, certainly realize how big and well-loved these football clubs are," Williams told GOAL. "Brazil is just like any other football-obsessed nation in the fact that football is a religion, it's not sport. It never will be. It's more than that. It's a part of the culture."

From Flamengo fans storming Times Square in New York City to Fluminense, Palmeiras, and Botafogo supporters creating electric atmospheres across the tournament, Williams is thrilled the world is finally taking notice of the brilliance of the Brasilerao.

"I think it's been wonderful to see how well the games have been attended," he said. "I commentated on a Botafogo game against Atletico Madrid, and Botafogo fans were by far and away the better fans compared to the Atletico Madrid fans. And you know, it's this is nothing new to me. It's just something that I think the Brazilian football fans and South American football fans should be very, very, very proud of."

The CWC semifinals kick off this week at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, and he believes a shock could be in store. Fluminense, out of Brazil, have been the Cinderella story of the tournament, making their way to the final four. They will take on Chelsea for a spot in the final against the winner of PSG-Real Madrid – and Williams believes they can best the English powerhouse.

"I do think they've got what it takes to get past Chelsea," he said. "And Thiago Silva? Legend, wherever he's played, whether it's Chelsea or Paris Saint-Germain and now Fluminense, he is a living legend. I can't believe he's still operating at this level at the age of 40. You know, it's remarkable to see. I think they've got what it takes."

As for the other semifinal? He had a point of view.

"I think PSG is the modern-day success story in European football at the moment, and they're my favorite to win it," he said. "I think they are the best team in the world right now."

Williams discussed the impact of Brazilian football on the Club World Cup, the growth of the competition and more in the latest edition of Mic'd Up, a recurring feature in which GOAL US taps into the perspective of broadcasters, analysts, and other pundits on the state of soccer in the U.S. and abroad.

Getty Images SportON THE CLUB WORLD CUP

GOAL: What have you made of the 32-team expanded FIFA Club World Cup?

WILLIAMS: I think it's been tremendously exciting. I'm always up for more football, and especially more football here in the U.S. And so when it was first suggested that this expanded Club World Cup was going to be a thing, I thought to myself, well, as long as it's done properly and the players are looked after, the facilities are good – then it shouldn't be a problem. And that was always going to be answered by which country it was going to be in, and so doing it in the U.S. has been the right choice. It has been a remarkable success, because the facilities here in this country, I would argue, are among the best in the world, regardless if you're training and playing in MLS stadiums. I know a handful of teams were using university training facilities and stadiums for their training camps. So I think from a facilities perspective it's been great

I think it's been so entertaining. And there haven't been too many nil-nils. I can't remember now how many goals we've had in its entirety, but I bet you it's more than people expected. I came into it with a very open mind. I think some people are just creatures of habit, aren't they? And are very satisfied with what they have. And I understand that. But I think we're in this age now where new is usually quite fresh and exciting, and I think that's been what the epitome of the Club World Cup has been. And so I think a lot of people, whether or not they took some convincing or not, have now had their heads turned, and I think it's become a legitimate competition. I think it's become something that clubs will want to play in, and a large portion of that is simply because of the prize money… so far so good for the first iteration of of this Club World Cup. I think it's been a tremendous success.

GOAL: What do you think of how FIFA has rolled out the tournament, and what can be learned?

WILLIAMS: I hope FIFA has learned from this. I think putting certain teams in certain markets clearly didn't work… I don't think you ever really have to worry about some of the bigger teams, like Real Madrid, Bayern, Munich, Paris Saint-Germain… But I think some of the other places where a lot of the English language audience weren't too familiar with certain teams, where they were placed was very, very good marketing and very good research. Putting Flamengo in the northeast of the country, where there is a very, very large Portuguese and Portuguese-speaking Brazilian population? I thought that was really good.

There was a night when I had just finished doing an NWSL game for Gotham, I was walking through Manhattan, and it was technically Saturday morning. Then there were hundreds, if not thousands, of Flamengo fans – and Esperance fans, to be fair to them as well – but there were thousands of people all donning their jerseys, all having a great time. And it was a party, sort of Carnival-like atmosphere.

And it actually got me very excited for next summer, which I think is going to be on another level. This was a really good dress rehearsal for the next summer. And I hope FIFA has taken advantage of the opportunities that have come their way this year. And I really, really hope that they've learned some lessons, because there were some games that left a little bit more to be desired, with regards to attendance – and that's purely because I think they're those teams were put in the wrong market. And so I hope people have learned from that.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportON BRAZIL'S IMPACT AT THE CWC

GOAL: Brazilian football has been one of the delightful surprises of the competition. As someone who has studied the Brasilerao, was this something you expected? Was it a surprise?

WILLIAMS: This is something I expected tenfold, to be honest. Honestly, I think people, if they didn't know, certainly realize how big and well-loved these football clubs are. Brazil is just like any other football-obsessed nation in the fact that football is a religion, it's not a sport. It never will be. It's more than that. It's a part of the culture. And so with the amount of people that are here in North America, and the number of people that I was told may very well travel up here to North America from South America, I did have an inkling that it may very well be the Brazilian teams that had good attendance.

Flamengo, I was fortunate enough to do two of their games, and the atmosphere was tremendous. It's as you would expect. So with regards to Flamengo themselves as a football club, they're a massive club, they're huge. And I just think now for the first time, a lot of the English language audience, whether that's here in the U.S. and Canada or in England or the Middle East or what have you. I think they are finally starting to understand that these are very, very big football clubs. And they're very well supported, for obvious reasons.

I think it's been wonderful to see how well the games have been attended. I commentated on a Botafogo game against Atletico Madrid, and Botafogo fans were by far and away the better fans compared to the Atletico Madrid fans. And you know, it's this is nothing new to me. It's just something that I think the Brazilian football fans and South American football fans should be very, very, very proud of.

GOAL: Brazilian football's next star is Estevao, who had a phenomenal tournament for Palmeiras and is now set to join Chelsea. Who from the Club World Cup is next up? Who were the players that caught your eye, and potentially, the world's?

WILLIAMS: Igor Jesus of Botafogo, I thought, led the line well. He was a massive pain for Paris-Saint Germain and an even bigger pain for Atletico Madrid. He proved that he can play at that level. And to my knowledge, he’s going to head off to Nottingham Forest over the course of the next couple of weeks. His teammate Jair Cunha, center half, is very, very composed on the ball, as you would expect any Brazilian footballer to be, but just does all the dirty work very, very cleanly. Tackles are often timed to perfection. The reading of the game is superb. The way that he can deliver a pass on a dime. His passing range is wonderful.

Getty Images SportON FLUMINENSE VS CHELSEA

GOAL: Fluminense vs Chelsea is a reunion for captain Thiago Silva, and a chance for the Brazilian side to shock the world. Is it a feasible task for them?

WILLIAMS: I do think they've got what it takes to get past Chelsea and Thiago Silva? Legend, wherever he's played, whether it's Chelsea or Paris Saint-Germain and now Fluminense, he is a living legend. I can't believe he's still operating at this level at the age of 40. You know, it's remarkable to see. I think they've got what it takes. I think there have been a couple of standouts from a Fluminense point of view as well. But Chelsea is obviously a very, very strong, very good team. And Cole Palmer seems to be now coming into his own. Takes time for some of the new players to gel, obviously, but I think once they understand Enzo Maresca and his system, there'll be no problem.

From a CONMEBOL perspective, it's massive. This tournament has probably gone as well as it could have gone for CONMEBOL… Fluminense will have made a bucket load of money from doing this. I think it's probably upwards of something like $60 million. That is what, whilst there is a lot of money in the Brasilerao, I think that's probably deemed next-level type money for Brazilian football. And so I go back to my previous point about this has been a wonderful tournament, and it's been a major opportunity for so many to showcase themselves. But also to make some, some good money that they can push them onto the next level, whatever the next level that they want to go through.

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Getty Images SportON PSG VS REAL MADRID

GOAL: Then, opposite, it’s Real Madrid vs. PSG, a battle of two giants. Who comes out on top, and why?

WILLIAMS: Well, I'll probably show a little bit more bias than regulars you would ask this question to because I love Paris. It is my favorite place in the world, and so watching Paris Saint-Germain as often as possible, watching Ligue 1 as often as possible. And I think that obviously, going up against the might of Real Madrid, there's going to be some problems. They're going to have to be a little more disciplined and a lot less open than they usually are.

I think the one area where they may struggle and they might have to be a little more reserved is in that fullback area where they often press Hakimi and Nuno Mendes into these high-pressing situations. And, you know, Luis Enrique has them moving into the center of midfield. And you know, they are the best-attacking fullbacks in world football. But I do wonder when they're going up against the likes of Vinicius Jr, will they need to be a little more reserved and in moments, be a little smarter?

There's no question Real Madrid are superior. Real Madrid is still, for me, one of the top-two, three teams in world football. But I think what's been refreshing over the course of the last couple of weeks is that people are now taking notice of PSG and taking on board that actually, it's not just them winning the gun all the time. They're actually a really dominant for that really started to happen when they started taking the personalities out of the dressing rooms and becoming more of a unit as a team.

And, you know, I think the signing of Khvicha Kvaratskhelia here was a stroke of genius from Luis Enrique when everybody was saying: 'Why do they need him, they needed a center forward?' And then all of a sudden, Dembele starts scoring goals for fun, Desire Doue all of a sudden starts getting more space because of Kvaratskhelia and what he's doing off the ball because of Dembele and the runs that he's making now because of Kvaratskhelia’s passing range. I think PSG is the modern-day success story in European football at the moment, and they're my favorite to win it. I think they are the best team in the world right now.

Australia and England face different degrees of jeopardy

One team is very much in the race for the World Cup semi-finals, the other is desperate for Champions Trophy qualification

Andrew Miller03-Nov-20235:47

Harmison: ‘England have to turn up, they have no choice’

Big picture: Can England spoil Australia’s semi-final push?Suffice to say, this is not the occasion it was earmarked to be. England versus Australia at the back-end of the group stages, at the most grandiloquent venue that this World Cup can offer. This was intended, at the very least, to be a shoot-out for the semi-finals, and maybe even a dress rehearsal for a yet more significant showdown at this same venue further down the line.And long, long ago, when Australia were the team sitting rock-bottom of the World Cup standings after back-to-back losses to South Africa and India, England might even have assumed that this would be their opportunity to land the final smackdown on their oldest foes.How the worm has turned since then. Australia have gone on to win four from four, while it’s England who have spent the past fortnight circling the drain. Somehow, they go into this contest with a 0.4% chance of reaching the knock-outs – but the fact that they aren’t dead yet despite five losses in six only goes to show how loaded towards the established teams this format really is.”The problem is, we’ve been crap,” as Ben Stokes succinctly put it, in summary of an epochally terrible campaign.And yet, there’s still an awful lot at stake for both sides – and it’s not simply a matter of pride on England’s part. Last week’s shock revelation, that the final placings in this group stage will determine the participants for the 2025 Champions Trophy, means there’s still more humiliation to come if England cannot somehow scramble their way from tenth to eighth in the table.As for Australia, it won’t be entirely plain-sailing into the semis if they drop the ball now. A pumped-up Afghanistan lie in wait in their next round (and they look set to be level on points by the end of their ongoing clash with the Netherlands) while a late-charging Pakistan offer another unexpected top-four challenge, albeit their own clash with fourth-placed New Zealand will mean two points dropped by one rival or the other.Very different degrees of jeopardy are at play therefore, but as tends to be the case in Anglo-Australian World Cup clashes, the immediate tournament context is sure to be rolled into the wider, wilder, narrative of an ancient and implacable rivalry.Australia have won four in a row since losing their first two games at the World Cup•AFP/Getty ImagesAnd for most recent instalment, you don’t need to dredge too far into the memory banks. Up to 15 of the 22 players on parade in Ahmedabad on Saturday will have played their part in an Ashes for the ages in the English summer just gone, and with that series locked at 2-2 – amid talk of moral victories on the one hand and disdain for the “Bazball” narrative on the other – it won’t take much for this rematch to be dressed up as a decider.Certainly, the near-messianic sense of purpose that encapsulated England’s Test summer has deserted them since the switch from red- to white-ball cricket, and speaking in Dharmasala last week, Pat Cummins, Australia’s captain, visibly struggled to choke down his mirth when asked to comment on his rival’s plight.He’s had rather less to smile about in an uncomfortable build-up to this match. Glenn Maxwell, the recent compiler of the fastest century in World Cup history, is out of contention after his freakish golf injury (why always golf? How do actual professional golfers not suffer these endless on-course mishaps?), while Mitchell Marsh’s return to Perth for family reasons is an untimely disruption after his richly productive role in the top three.In David Warner and the fit-again Travis Head, Australia still boast a pair of openers with three times as many centuries as England’s entire line-up has contributed across six matches – and the confidence that they will be able to project in the powerplay could yet be crucial.England, however, will enter this match with judgement swirling around their misfiring troops – and David Willey’s impending international retirement is a reminder, too, that stages such as these don’t present themselves forever in the cut-throat world of professional sport. There’s no time like the present, therefore, for the still-just-about-reigning World Champions to serve a reminder of their ability. Especially if, in the process, they can make their arch-opponents’ progress that little bit less serene.Form guide: Australia on a hot streak, England less soAustralia WWWWL (last five completed ODIs, most recent first)
England LLLLWBen Stokes hasn’t minced words when talking about England’s performance at this World Cup•Getty ImagesIn the spotlight: Joe Root and Adam ZampaSpeaking in the build-up, Joe Root insisted that, “man for man”, England are still a better team than Australia. However, his caveat, “when we play our best stuff” might as well have been a deeply self-referential comment. Root is not the only senior player to have suffered a collapse in form in this most desperate of campaigns, but his downturn still feels the most surprising, because he’s never really done peaks and troughs in the course of his formidable career. Remember when his failure to convert endless Test fifties into hundreds was the single biggest gripe about his record? Right now, England’s most stealthy run-accumulator is unable even to get out of the powerplay – in 16 ODIs since the start of 2022, he’s been dismissed eight times in the first ten overs, for a total of 33 runs from 72 balls, which are unsustainable figures by the standards of any international No.3, let alone one of England’s very greatest.In their former guise as ODI world-beaters, England would almost certainly have considered Adam Zampa a marked man. They never used to stand on ceremony against their opponents’ star wristspinners – look at the treatment of Kuldeep Yadav (1 for 72) and Rashid Khan (0 for 110) in 2019, both of whom have exacted notable revenge this time out. And after a tough start to this tournament against India and South Africa, Zampa has grown in confidence with every subsequent outing – his current haul of 16 wickets includes 15 in four consecutive wins, giving him twice as many as Australia’s next most effective bowlers, Cummins and Josh Hazlewood (eight apiece). Zampa also has recent success against these opponents. Albeit England were rather distracted by their T20 World Cup win when they last met in an ODI series in November 2022, he still emerged with 11 wickets at 11.90 in a 3-0 whitewash.Team news: Maxwell, Marsh out for AustraliaThere might be temptation for England to look to the future, and give opportunities to some of the players more likely to feature in the post-World Cup rebuild – most notably their Under-30 pairing of Harry Brook and Gus Atkinson, who has been passed fit despite wearing a cast on his little finger following a blow during training on Thursday. But that would require some statement omissions from the existing XI, and the sense in the build-up is that the players who got England into this mess will be given a chance, for now, to atone for their shortcomings. Brydon Carse, Reece Topley’s replacement, is waiting in the wings, but Mark Wood – three-year contract and all – is just as likely to be unleashed once more with Ashes-style orders to “bowl rockets”.England (probable): 1 Jonny Bairstow, 2 Dawid Malan, 3 Joe Root, 4 Ben Stokes, 5 Jos Buttler (capt, wk), 6 Moeen Ali / Harry Brook, 7 Liam Livingstone, 8 Chris Woakes, 9 David Willey, 10 Mark Wood, 11 Adil Rashid2:07

Who will Australia bring in for Glenn Maxwell?

All manner of upheaval for Australia in their build-up, with Maxwell’s golf-buggy-induced concussion now compounded by Marsh’s return home for family reasons. It leaves their 15-man squad stretched very thin, a point that captain Cummins has commented on, but the short-term fixes are fairly self-evident. Two further allrounders in Marcus Stoinis and Cameron Green are the obvious stand-ins, leaving Sean Abbott once again on the sidelines, while Steven Smith and Marnus Labuschagne are likely to move up a place each in the order, to Nos. 3 and 4 respectively.Australia (probable): 1 David Warner, 2 Travis Head, 3 Steven Smith, 4 Marnus Labuschagne, 5 Josh Inglis (wk), 6 Marcus Stoinis, 7 Cameron Green, 8 Pat Cummins (capt), 9 Mitchell Starc, 10 Adam Zampa, 11 Josh HazlewoodPitch and conditions: The red or the black?As so often in Ahmedabad, the soil type will be a key factor in how the pitch plays. Black soil promises slow and low, red soil promises quick and bouncy, or so the lore goes. At least there won’t be any of the smog concerns that are dogging the build-up to Bangladesh-Sri Lanka in Delhi. A toasty 35 degrees is promised by day in Ahmedabad, with some prospect of dew under lights in the evenings – although England in particular have been caught out by that assumption before.Stats and trivia: Buttler closing in on 5000 Australia have won six of their previous nine meetings with England at the 50-over World Cup, including four in a row from 2003 to the group stage in 2019. However, England did win the most recent clash, by eight wickets at Edgbaston in the 2019 semi-final. Jos Buttler needs another 72 runs to become the third-fastest Englishman to 5000 ODI runs, in 150 innings. Overall, only six wicketkeeper-batters have 5000 or more runs in ODIs. David Willey, who has confirmed his retirement from international cricket at the end of the tournament, needs six more wickets in a maximum of three games to reach 100 in ODIs. Quotes”That was a couple of months ago. It’s done: it’s a new game, new tournament. But I always think a healthy amount of rivalry is good – especially our playing group. We’re quite a chilled, calm group, so when we get a little bit more fired up, I actually don’t think it’s too bad a thing.”
“It’s just been a disaster, and there’s no point sugarcoating it because it’s probably what you’re all going to write anyway – and it’s true.”

ممدوح عباس يخرج عن صمته بشأن أحمد فتوح.. ويُحذّر الزمالك

علق ممدوح عباس، رئيس نادي الزمالك الأسبق، على الجدل الدائر حول موقف أحمد فتوح، قائد الفريق، بعد الأزمة الأخيرة التي تعرض لها بسبب حضوره إحدى الحفلات دون إذن من الجهاز الفني وخروجه من المعسكر، وهي الواقعة التي تسببت في تغريمه ماليًا وإحالته للتحقيق.

وكتب عباس عبر حسابه الرسمي بمنصة “إكس”: “لم أفهم هذه الضجة المثارة حول أحمد فتوح، كابتن نادي الزمالك، عقده ما زال ممتدًا، والرجل عاشق للقلعة البيضاء، ولا أؤيد فكرة إعارته أو بيعه حتى لا نبكي على اللبن المسكوب”.

وأضاف رئيس الزمالك السابق: “فتوح ليس فقط قائد الزمالك وظهيره الأيسر، بل هو الظهير الأساسي أيضًا لمنتخب مصر”.

طالع أيضًا | جمال عبد الحميد: زيزو ليس أقوى صفقة لـ الأهلي.. والزمالك قد يُعلن عن مفاجأة

وكان مجلس إدارة نادي الزمالك قد قرر توقيع غرامة مالية قدرها مليون جنيه على اللاعب، بالإضافة إلى إحالته للتحقيق، بسبب عدم التزامه بالتعليمات.

وشهدت مواقع التواصل الاجتماعي موجة من الهجوم الجماهيري ضد فتوح، حيث انقسمت الآراء بين مؤيد لرحيله ومعارض لذلك، في ظل تكرار أزماته خارج الملعب.

India and South Africa prep for T20I series decider

Chances of a full game are high and Johannesburg typically has plenty for batters and fast bowlers

Firdose Moonda13-Dec-20233:55

Manjrekar: Would like to see Shreyas Iyer at No. 3

Big picture: India, SA and their T20 World Cup gainsAnd just like that, both teams best chance for T20 World Cup preparation on the international stage will come to an end, two days after it began. What’s been gleaned so far? Only as much as we could from 19.3 overs of India’s batting and 13.5 of South Africa’s, and which we can briefly summarise as this: Suryakumar Yadav and his shots over the wicketkeeper are among the most entertaining things in T20 cricket. Reeza Hendricks must open the batting for South Africa at the next T20 World Cup, irrespective of who his opening partner is. Tabraiz Shamsi has matured into a T20 banker, and Rinku Singh is winning the race as India’s finisher so far. That’s not too bad for a series where the first match was washed out entirely and the second rain-affected.It also means we’ve yet to see a full T20 game and the big hope is that the Wanderers delivers one. Even if it does, neither side is at full strength and South Africa have reduced their stocks even further by releasing Marco Jansen and Gerald Coetzee to play in the domestic four-day game in preparation for the Tests later in the tour and will field an inexperienced pace attack. India are also without a key player as Deepak Chahar has remained at home for personal reasons. Both sets of seamers struggled for consistency in damp conditions at St George’s Park and will want to get their disciplines right in the decider. They need look no further than Mohammed Siraj, whose lines were exemplary, as an example.While the spinners were all impressive in Gqeberha, they are unlikely to find much assistance in Johannesburg and could end up being the main targets for batting line-ups that both have headline acts. Hendricks’ run of form sees him average 51.50 from his last 12 T20Is while Suryakumar and Rinku give India a powerful middle-order combination. All three of them might have the T20 World Cup in the back of their minds but India’s stand-in captain, for his part, isn’t saying so.”Go out and enjoy yourself,” has been his message to his players and with Thursday being the eve of the public holiday South Africa have declared to celebrate the Springboks Rugby World Cup win, who would dare to argue?Form guideSouth Africa: WLLLL (last five matches, most recent first)
India: LWLWW In the spotlight: Matthew Breetzke and Yashasvi JaiswalIn a truncated chase on Tuesday night, Matthew Breetzke was off to a sparkling start with 16 off 7 balls and showed good energy at the crease – almost too good. He was hasty in turning for a second run with his opening partner Hendricks still to leave the non-striker’s end and was visibly furious with himself when he was run out, squandering an opportunity to anchor a chase. He has one more chance to make a solid case for a more regular role at the Wanderers, where he will open for the final time in international cricket this year. Breetzke is not part of the ODI squad.Reeza Hendricks has been excellent for South Africa in T20Is this year•Getty ImagesIn the other camp, Yashasvi Jaiswal’s immense talent was limited to three balls in the opening match but he will be eager to show more of what he can do. With a reputation for aggression made perfectly clear by an eye-popping strike rate – 161.57 from his 14 T20Is so far – Jaiswal’s next challenge is to test it in South African conditions. Although he won’t be facing South Africa’s first-choice attack, there will still be plenty of pace, bounce and movement on offer and how he counters could make for an interesting contest.Team news: New faces for South Africa?With Jansen and Coetzee out, South Africa may find place for one, or both, of Nandre Burger and Ottniel Baartman to debut. Burger may edge ahead as he offers extra pace. Donovan Ferreira could also find his way into the XI, as an extra allrounder.South Africa (probable): 1 Reeza Hendricks, 2 Matthew Breetzke, 3 Aiden Markam (capt), 4 Heinrich Klaasen (wk), 5 David Miller, 6 Tristan Stubbs, 7 Donovan Ferreira, 8 Andile Phehlukwayo, 9 Lizaad Williams, 10 Ottniel Baartman/Nandre Burger, 11 Tabraiz ShamsiGiven Chahar has not joined the squad in South Africa yet, if India want to make any changes, it’s likely to be in the batting and spin departments, rather than among the seamers. Ruturaj Gaikwad missed Tuesday’s match with illness and could come in for Shubman Gill if he has recovered. Kuldeep Yadav may make way for Ravi Bishnoi, even though conditions are unlikely to offer too much to either of them.India (probable): 1 Yashasvi Jaiswal, 2 Ruturaj Gaikwad/Shubman Gill, 3 Tilak Varma, 4 Suryakumar Yadav (capt), 5 Rinku Singh, 6 Jitesh Sharma (wk), 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 Arshdeep Singh, 9 Kuldeep Yadav/Ravi Bishnoi, 10 Mohammed Siraj, 11 Mukesh Kumar Pitch and conditions: Clear(ish) skies and a great game in the offingThe news everyone wants to hear is that the drizzle has drifted away and they’re mostly in luck. Thursday’s forecast for Johannesburg is clear for the late afternoon with only a 25% chance of evening thunderstorms. That means the chances of a full match are pretty good and the prospect of entertainment, even better.At altitude, expect the ball to reach the boundary quicker but with good pace and bounce, there should be plenty for the quicks as well. Stats and trivia: Runs, runs and more runs Hendricks is South Africa’s leading run-scorer in T20I cricket this year, with 108 runs more than his nearest competitor, Aiden Markram. For India, Suryakumar leads the batting charts, and has 363 runs more than the next highest run-scorer Jaiswal. Suryakumar also broke into the all-time top 10 six-hitters’ list in T20Is after Tuesday match. He has 115 sixes to his name. The Highveld has been spectacular for T20I run-scoring this year. In March, Centurion’s SuperSport Park hosted the game with the highest match aggregate – 517 – between South Africa and West Indies. And two days later, the Wanderers saw the 16th highest match aggregate of 433 reached in a thriller between the same two sides. Quotes “Rob has made the environment a lot more relaxed. He has made the guys be themselves. We are human beings. He has let us have bad days. He has allowed our families in. A lot of the guys are husbands and fathers, so that’s important. That happiness that the guys have makes us play better.”
“For every series, I was preparing for the conditions. If you see, West Indies was a bit on the slower side, and if you see Ireland, [the pitches] were similar to South Africa wickets, it was a bit bouncy and seaming a bit. We were preparing according to the [conditions] and we are India. So, it has been a great experience and great learning.”

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